C++ File and Stream Input/output

in this post i am describing c++ file and stream input/output. you can try it your self,

File I/O is based on streams. <fstream.h> must be included in your program

First operation is to open file

· ofstream outFile(char* filename,enum open_mode mode);

· ifstream inFile(char* filename,enum open_mode mode);

open_mode is optional and defined in ios.h for appending, nocreate, noreplace

Test if open operation was successful

· if(!outputFile)

· // error occurred during open

Use << for output and >> for input

Output and input operators defined for standard types

Useful to provide << for your own classes

· friend ostream& opeator<<(ostream& s,YourClass& c)

Use getline() or gets() members to read lines of text.

· inFile.getline(char* buffer,int size,char delimiter);

· inFile.gets(char** addrOfPtrToChar,char delimiter);

With getline() you specify buffer and maximum size. With gets() you specify pointer to a pointer. gets() will provide a buffer with each call and store pointer in your pointer variable. Both functions will read newline from file but not place it in string.

Test state of file operations using member functions

· while(!ifstreamObject.eof())

· // do something while reading data

·

· if(ofstreamObject.bad())

· // give error message that file output failed

Also good() and fail() available. If stream is not good then all operations are null.

There is a position associated with the file. This is the byte location in the file where the next read or write operation will take place.

There are functions for manipulating the file position.

· // move to a specific byte position in file

· inFile.seekg(streampos);

· outFile.seekp(streampos);

·

· // move relative to a direction. seek_dir = beg, cur, end

· // streamoff is offset from the seek_dir

· inFile.seekg(streamoff,seek_dir);

· outFile.seekp(streamoff,seek_dir);

·

· // clear eof or bad state

· inFile.clear();

·

· // find file position

· streampos inFile.tellg();

· streampos outFile.tellg();

You can look ahead in an input file or “put back” unwanted characters in the input buffers.

· int inFile.peek();

· inFile.putback(char c);

There are two in-memory streams that are defined in <strstream.h>.

· char* p = new char(size);

· ostrstream outString(char *p, int size);

· istrstream inString(char *p,int size);

All output is written to the string specified in the ostrstream create. Input is read from the istrstream. All stream operations are valid on these streams including stream position and state.

Output Formatting

Many formatting commands are set via member functions

Field width – minimum number of characters for next number or string

cout.width(4);

Fill character – specify the character to fill field. Default is blank.

cout.fill(`#’);

Many other format parameters can be set using setf() and unsetf() member functions.